Down, Bromley, Kent
Aug. 9th.
My dear Sir
I am very much obliged for your note & for the Practical Entomologist.1 I received your last paper & read it carefully & have just looked at it & find many passages marked, amongst others the concluding paragraph; but I am not sure that I think so much of this argument as of some others which you have advanced.2 I must say I am very glad to hear that you are going to give up your Journal for it must have been a very heavy burden, especially of late with your wife in such a suffering state.3 You will also now have more time for science.
With respect to the duplicate of the “Origin” I should rather like it to be sent to Dr. Leidy, the Paleontologist;4 but if there is any one else to whom you would like to send it, pray do so. I have been working very hard at my new book & I have no brains left, so you must excuse the stupidity of this letter, & the circumstance that I cannot say positively whether I received your letter of Feb 25, but if I did receive it it is safe for future reference in one of my portfolios.5 I do not remember ever receiving an unpaid letter from you. I am sorry to say I do not know the name of the oak gall which has spread throughout England.6 I was much interested by the passages which you marked in the Prac: Entomol: & have one question which I should be much obliged if you would sometime answer; it is, are you sure that the Lucanidæ use their great jaws to hold the females in copulation; I always thought that they used them in fighting with other males, & I am nearly sure that this is the case.—7
My dear Sir | Yours very sincerely | Ch. Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-5603,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on